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Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) support for Nonstop Routing (NSR) enables provider edge (PE) routers to maintain BGP state with
customer edge (CE) routers and ensure continuous packet forwarding during a Route Processor (RP) switchover or during a planned
In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) for a PE router. The BGP—IPv6 NSR feature extends BGP support for NSR to Cisco IPv6 VPN
Provider Edge Routers (6VPE).
You are familiar with the concepts in the “BGP Support for Nonstop Routing (NSR) with Stateful Switchover (SSO)” and “BGP
NSR Support for iBGP Peers” modules of the IP Routing: BGP Configuration Guide.
Information About BGP—IPv6 NSR
Overview of BGP—IPv6 NSR
Nonstop routing (NSR) is beneficial for BGP peers because it reduces the likelihood of dropped packets during switchover from
the active Route Processor (RP) to the standby RP. Switchover occurs when the active RP fails for some reason and the standby
RP takes control of active RP operations. The BGP—IPv6 NSR feature extends BGP support for NSR to include the following IPv6-based
address families:
IPv6 unicast
IPv6 unicast + label
IPv6 PE-CE
VPNv6 unicast
The figure above depicts a basic deployment scenario. Provider edge (PE) router 1, P, and PE2 form a 6VPE cloud. The customer
edge (CE) router 1 to PE1 connection is IPv6 (VRF). The PEs are HA/SSO and NSF capable. The P routers are capable of Multiprotocol
Label Switching (MPLS) label preservation (NSF equivalent).
As the CE1 is customer equipment, the provider cannot determine that it must be upgraded to be NSF aware. If PE1 can perform
NSR on its connection to CE1, then CE1 will not be aware or impacted when PE1 performs a switchover in SSO mode. For all other
connections within the autonomous system, the operations may be NSF or graceful restart. This means the control plane will
be reset, and all the immediate peers will be aware of it and will resend data to help re-establish the session, but forwarding
will be uninterrupted.
Neighbors not operating under NSR are still expected to be NSF capable/aware. If the CE is already NSF aware (that is, it
can handle a BGP graceful restart by its peers), then the PE-CE connection will not be NSR, and will instead follow the regular
NSF processing model. This parallels NSR for VPNv4 and assists in conserving network resources.
How to Configure BGP—IPv6 NSR
Configuring BGP—IPv6 NSR
Perform this task on a PE router if you want to configure a BGP peer to support BGP—IPv6 NSR.
Specifies the IPv6 address family and enters address family configuration mode.
The
unicast keyword specifies the IPv6 unicast address family.
The
vrf keyword and
vrf-name argument specify the name of the virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instance to associate with subsequent IPv6 address
family configuration mode commands.
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The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists
only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise,
subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco
Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Table 1. Feature Information for BGP—IPv6 NSR
Feature Name
Releases
Feature Information
BGP—IPv6 NSR
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.9S
BGP support for NSR enables provider edge (PE) routers to maintain BGP state with customer edge (CE) routers and ensure continuous
packet forwarding during a Route Processor (RP) switchover or during a planned ISSU for a PE router. The BGP—IPv6 NSR feature
extends BGP support for NSR to Cisco IPv6 VPN Provider Edge Routers (6VPE).